So that was Christmas...

January 25, 2016 by Stuart Barber

Now it's 2016 but that man Spieth – not Woods – just carries on where he left off, so not much has changed.

Jordan Spieth in winning Hyundai Tournament of Champions 2016 coasted to an eight shot victory, and so reinforced his position at the top of the world rankings. Rory McIlroy was not playing, so the first real contest between the world's best comes this week in Abu Dhabi.

With McIlroy, Spieth, and Fowler playing together (the myth of a genuine draw is well and truly exploded!) they certainly attracted the crowds, but the fireworks came from the USGA Amateur Champion, Bryson DeChambreau, playing in his second European Tour event. An 8 under par 64 leads the way by one shot from Henrik Stenson, with Rory McIlroy one shot further back at 6 under, Jordan Spieth another 2 shots adrift at 4 under, and Rickie Fowler tied at 21 st spot on 2 under. Just remember “One swallow does not make a summer” So we'll just have to wait and see who in the next three days produces the fireworks.

I recently asked an American based golf course architect what he was doing lately, he replied that he was working on a couple of small projects: repairing a few sand traps at one course, adding a couple of tees at another, and softening some greens at a third course. “Are you working on any new golf courses?” I asked. “There just aren't many new courses being built in America at this time”. He said “In fact over the past 3-4 years, about 10 courses are going out of business for every new course we're building. There's just not much fun in the golf business here these days”. Adding “Any young person who wants to be in the golf design business today needs to be studying Mandarin and preparing to go look for work in China.”

Though now with the state taking a keen interest in possible fraud and financial jiggery pokery in the construction of new courses and membership for local government officers who grant planning consents maybe that will slow as well.

The idea that there is not much fun in the golf business is hardly new. The world's greatest golfer and, arguably, one of the most successful golf course designer, Jack Nicklaus, has recently claimed that “Golf has become too difficult, too expensive and takes too long.” Ironically, no one has had more to do with golf's becoming too difficult and too expensive than Mr. Nicklaus himself. Indeed, he bears much of the responsibility for the game's taking too long also, as generations of golfers watching him on television learned to adopt his deliberately, often infuriatingly slow pace of play.

Let's consider the state of the game in America, and the malaise which is affecting the game on their side of the Atlantic.

Golf may be a game but the business of business is not to have fun, and to claim that there's no fun in the golf business should shock no one. The current sickness in the American golf scene, which threatens the viability of golf course operations throughout the land, is a result of the many complex ways that the business of golf is subverting the game of golf. Throughout the industry, there is much wailing and gnashing of teeth over the question of how to get golf growing again.

Tom Watson, another great champion and occasional golf course designer, once said that “Golf will grow as long as it's fun.” Characteristically, Watson's prose is as crisp as his wedge play; and his analysis is dead on target. However, I expect the business-minded developers of golf courses all over the earth will insist that golf, the game, cannot exist unless creating golf courses also creates profit for the developers. Producing golf courses is a capital–intensive business, they will insist, with the purchase of real estate and hiring of designers, and the costs of construction and, inevitably, marketing. And if those expensive golf course projects cannot return a meaningful profit to the developers, there will be fewer and fewer golf courses being built.

The hard-headed profit-driven businessman certainly has a valid point. Golf courses are expensive to build; many golf course designers are very expensive to employ; and maintaining a golf course is a very expensive ongoing proposition. But while these facts are undeniable, and while they accurately account for the scarcity of new golf course projects, they miss the main point for building a golf course in the first place. No matter how expensive it is to produce the course, the course will not succeed unless it produces enjoyment — fun — for the players. The profit motive alone does not guarantee a successful golf course. Golf courses do not exist simply to generate profits for developers. In fact, to get back to the observation of Jack Nicklaus, the game is suffering in America, and all over the world, precisely because golf has become too expensive.

It might seem that from its beginnings, golf in America has always been very expensive. When C.B. MacDonald organized his “Millionaires Club” to develop the National Golf Links of America on Long Island in New York, the 100 elite members were all captains of industry and finance. Throughout the young nation, as the automobile and public transportation provided greater mobility, private country clubs were developed near the major urban areas, offering golf as one of the inducements for prospective members and home owners.

However, after the world wars of the first half of last century, with the return of peace and with the encouraging example of President Eisenhower, many ordinary Americans began to take up the game both for the fun of it and as a symbol of their new prosperity. In addition, the enthusiasm generated by Arnold Palmer, and television's exposure of his charismatic personality as a golf champion, inspired many ordinary folks to play the game that seemed to offer such excitement and joy.

Harvey Pennick, one of America's most famous golf instructors, encouraged us all to “Go out and have fun. Golf is a game for everyone, not just for the talented few.” As more took up the game, it naturally created a need for more golf courses to be built in local communities all across America. Like mushrooms, nine and 18 hole golf courses shot up in towns and cities all over the landscape in the 1950s, 60s and 70s.

Many resorts began to add golf courses to the amenities they offered their guests and tourists, while clubs dedicated exclusively to the game of golf soon appeared, especially in warmer and more moderate climates throughout the land. In addition, many private communities were developed with a golf course running through the property as the chief inducement for residents to purchase homes within these communities.

It is to be hoped that in China, India, and those countries in eastern Europe and South America, where new courses are being built these days, that developers of golf courses, in local towns and residential communities, even at the tourist resorts, understand that golf is, above all, a game. Too often in America, particularly when the economy has been vibrant, the business of golf course development has lost sight of that primary fact. If golf is to succeed and continue to exist for more than just the fabulously wealthy, the game must continue to be fun for all who play it. When the game ceases to be fun, for whatever reason, the game itself is in serious jeopardy.

Both the USGA and the Royal and Ancient are urgently seeking ways to halt the decline in those playing golf, encourage new players and hopefully halt the closure of courses. As golf courses become more expensive to maintain and the world's resources diminish, none of these challenges will become any easier to overcome.

In the meantime let's sit back and watch the players in Abu Dhabi continue to enthral us with their skill and expertise in the sheer art of playing golf. The skill of the professional golfer continues to grow and the numbers watching now matches or exceeds those who watched Tiger Woods. We just need the numbers of those actually playing the game for fun to keep pace.

World Ranking: McIlroy jumps back into the World top 10 & Tournaments Roundup